Yorkshire Post

Tribute to bravery of lifeboat crews

A new book on the early history of two stations at Flamboroug­h recounts triumphs and tragedies at sea

- ALEXANDRA WOOD NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: alex.wood@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

ITS SHEER white cliffs brimming with birdlife make it one of Yorkshire’s most famous beauty spots.

But Flamboroug­h Head, a sailors’ landmark since time immemorial, has “always been a graveyard for ships”.

Despite the building of two lighthouse­s, the first in the 17th century and the second by Trinity House in 1805, shipwrecks regularly occurred with dreadful loss of life.

But it took one of worst maritime disasters on Yorkshire’s coast to provide the impetus to set up two lifeboat stations.

A new book chroniclin­g their history from 1871 to 1993 by Paul L Arro, a volunteer lifeboat treasurer at Flamboroug­h for the past three decades, is a fascinatin­g read for anyone interested in maritime history.

Bridlingto­n Bay, known as the

Bay of Safety to mariners, was anything but on February 10, 1871 to the crews of a huge fleet of small boats, many carrying coal from the Tyne, who were sheltering there when a gale blew up, forcing them on shore, where the vessels broke up.

Some of the sailors drowned within shouting distance of people on land who tried in vain to attempt a rescue.

The new book, Safe within the Lifeboat, tells how during the gale, Flamboroug­h fishermen bravely sprang into action to try and save the crews of the Arrow.

Some 30 vessels in all were lost along with 70 fishermen and six lifeboatme­n from Bridlingto­n. Much of the coal the colliers were carrying was washed ashore and afterwards “the sea ran black for many weeks”.

The rescue of the Arrow led to the two stations being opened that November – one at North Landing and the other at South Landing – allowing crews to launch from one side if a gale was making it impossible on the other.

The book records stories of heroism, but also the occasional tragedy, as lifeboats were launched to local cobles, deepsea trawlers, merchant vessels and visitors in need of help. One rescue was that of 15 men from the Grimsby-bound trawler Lord Ernle, returning from the White Sea, which ran ashore at the foot of 400ft cliffs at Bempton in dense fog late on March 2, 1937, in a heavy swell. Nearly 50 men went up to their chests in water to launch the lifeboat, to get to the trawler, which was down by the stern, and being pounded by heavy seas.

At one point the lifeboat was flung onto the deck, but all the crew were rescued.

Mr Arro said: “I hope I have done justice to the crews and the many rescues they carried out.

“I have worked alongside some amazing and dedicated lifeboat people over the years who have been committed to the Flamboroug­h Lifeboat Station.

“The dedication and bravery shown by the volunteer lifeboat crews from the first establishm­ent of the two stations in 1871, with pulling and sailing lifeboats, right through to the present day and the modern fast Atlantic 85 lifeboat, must be admired.”

I hope I have done justice to the crews and the many rescues. Paul L Arro, author of ‘Safe within the Lifeboat’.

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 ?? MAIN PICTURE: JAMES HARDISTY. ?? PROUD AUTHOR: Left and inset below, Paul L Arro, a volunteer treasurer for the RNLI lifeboat station, with a copy of his book; below, South Landing, Flamboroug­h; above, naming ceremony of the Flamboroug­h lifeboat in 1953.
MAIN PICTURE: JAMES HARDISTY. PROUD AUTHOR: Left and inset below, Paul L Arro, a volunteer treasurer for the RNLI lifeboat station, with a copy of his book; below, South Landing, Flamboroug­h; above, naming ceremony of the Flamboroug­h lifeboat in 1953.

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